Domain Tools

You have your domain, now what? Usually you won’t need to
do much, but you might find the need to update your
registrant information, forward your domain, consolidate
domains, or manually renew them. We provide the tools to
do all of that!

Billing Contact:

Primary DNS Server:

Secondary DNS Server:

Who can Change my Domain Record?

You can change your domain record by logging in to the control panel or contact us to make the change for you.

Primary DNS Server:

ex:ns1.101domain.com
Virtual Address (no IP Address)

Secondary DNS Server:

ex:ns2.101domain.com
Virtual Address (no IP Address)

Technical Contact:

Please change the Technical Contact to your New Hosting Company.

The Tech Contact always stays with the Hosting Company otherwise your Host is unable to make DNS Changes.

For all these changes we have to verify your E-mail address

Please allow approx. 24 hours for the changes to be made.

Domain Forwarding, Domain Masking, and Domain Cloaking

What is the major difference between normal "Domain Forwarding" and "Domain Cloaking"?

Domain Cloaking is not visible for any user. Domain Names with cloaking are able to be registered to all Search Engines.

Domain Names with a normal DNS Forwarding are visible for all users (The browser address bar shows the new forwarded domain address).

Domain Names with normal DNS Forwarding are unable to be registered to any search engine. Search Engine Robots will stop after the forwarding command.

Domain Forwarding

Domain Forwarding just might be the way to put any domain name to work, whether you've built a site for it or not. Just select a domain name (or names), add forwarding, and any visitor who types in that name will be redirected to the existing site you designate. Domain Forwarding is especially useful if you have a site with a long, complicated address. Now you can just register a simpler domain name (easily done using one of the less common top level domains, like .BIZ instead of .COM, for example) and then forward it. It's that easy.

Domain masking

Domain Masking lets you protect the address of a particular site, while still allowing customers to access the content. Here's how it works: First, you purchase a domain name, like domain1.com. However, this is only an address; domain1.com is not going to have its own web site. Through masking, you use this address to display the content of another web site, say, forwarded-to.com.

Search Engine Tips

Some site owners create target pages that automatically take visitors to different pages within a web site. The meta refresh tag is one typical way of doing this. Some search engines will refuse to index a page with a high meta refresh rate, and Google will not index pages with any redirection whatsoever.